Candidate’s Name: Heather Cuccia
Grade Level: 1st Grade
Title of the lesson: Readers Theater
the Three Little Pigs (Working on Fluency)
Length of the lesson: 1.5 hour
Central focus of the lesson (The central focus
should align with the CCSS/content standards and support students to develop
an essential literacy strategy and requisite skills for comprehending or
composing texts in meaningful contexts)
Key questions:
●
what do you want your students to
learn?
Students will learn how to read
aloud and be able to perform a reading with expression, this will enhance
their reading skills and build their confidence for being able to read with
purpose and be fluent in reading.
●
what are the important
understandings and core concepts you want students to develop within the
learning segment?
They will work on fluency skills
with this lesson and be able develop reading with expression and purpose.
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Theory Base: Focus on the educational theories that are
the foundation for this lesson.
·
Gardner’s Theory on Multiple
Intelligences.
·
The educational and literacy-based
strategies used: (Visual Learners/Hands on activity enhancing fluency skills)
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Knowledge of students to inform
teaching (prior knowledge/prerequisite skills and personal/cultural/community
assets)
Key questions:
●
What do students know, what can
they do, what are they learning to do?
Students are learning how to read and
add to their vocabulary. They are learning to enhance their fluency skills
and be able to read with purpose and use expression to show emotion while
reading. They can read out loud and they know that reading is the key for
every other subject.
●
What do you know about your
students’ everyday experiences, cultural backgrounds and practices, and
interests?
Students have all different types
of backgrounds, but they respect each other in the classroom and overall do
work well together. I as the teacher understand
my student’s diverse needs and with every lesson take that into account before
working with them.
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Common Core State Standards (List
the number and text of the standard. If only a portion of a standard is being
addressed, then only list the relevant part[s].)
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.1.4
Identify words and phrases in stories or poems that suggest feelings or appeal to the senses.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.1.5
Explain major differences between books that tell stories and books that give information, drawing on a wide reading of a range of text types.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.SL.1.4
Describe people, places, things, and events with relevant details, expressing ideas and feelings clearly.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.SL.1.5
Add drawings or other visual displays to descriptions when appropriate to clarify ideas, thoughts, and feelings. |
Support literacy development
through language (academic language)
●
Identify one language function
(interpret- the students can become the part they are playing in the readers
theater because they can read fluently)
●
Identify a key learning task from
your plans that provide students opportunities to practice using the language
function. (Read aloud with expression)
●
Describe language demands (Oral)
students need to understand and/or use. Students will put on a play from the
Three Little Pigs and be able to use expression while reading which will help
them develop their fluency skills.
Vocabulary
●
General academic terms: Interpret
& Express.
●
Content specific vocabulary (Three
Little Pigs, bricks, straw, sticks, home, blow)
Sentence Level
●
Sentence structure- Grade level
appropriate
●
Conversation, discussion, interpretation
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Learning objectives
1.
Students will be able to read aloud with
fluency.
2.
Students will be able to read with
expression.
3.
Students will be able to read with a purpose.
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Formal and informal assessment
(including type[s] of assessment and what is being assessed)
Formal Assessment: Students will
write 3 sentences based on which pig’s house they felt was their favorite and
why. (Checking for comprehension)
Informal Assessment: I will grade
the students based on the Readers Theater productions for the Three Little
Pigs. Based on the student’s techniques
and if the role they played flowed properly. Also checking to see how well
the character discussions went back and forth if any delays or uncertainty,
such as stumbling on words.
●
Explain how the design or
adaptation of your assessment allows students with specific needs to
demonstrate their learning. Consider all students, including students with
IEPs, ELLs, struggling readers, and/or gifted students.
IEPS, ELLS, struggling readers –
This will help these students with fluency and comprehension and allowing for
them to learn self-expression while reading because they will have to
practice this lesson by rereading the script repeatedly to help them memorize
their part and to help them get familiar with their role.
Gifted Students- This gives these students a chance to enhance
the production by helping with any extra background props or other things
they may want to add into the production if time allows. The gifted students
will also be broken up so that they can help the other students who struggle
with fluency. (A type of buddy system for support in my classroom)
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Instructional procedure:
Instructional strategies and learning tasks (including what you and the
students will be doing) that support diverse student needs. Your design
should be based on the following:
Do Now: Students will be handed a
script from the Three little pigs and I will go over exactly what we will be
doing I will first ask if anyone heard the story the three little pigs and we
will have a general conversation about that. Then I will personally read the
entire script a loud to the entire class using expression. Asking students
after I read it, if they noticed anything different with my tone of voice. I
will then begin to explain how using different tones help express how one may
be feeling.
Next: We will be doing a reader’s theater
production which we will be videotaping for others to see. It will be based
on the Three little pigs and each one of you will be able to take part in the
production, this is from the script that is at the student’s desk already.
Next: Students will be broken up
into groups based on reading level’s and each one will have one gifted reader
in their group and go over the script together. I will give them some time to
do so. The student’s will be able to cast their roles that each group
chooses. So, whoever wants to be the wolf, the pig1 pig 2 and so on can do
so.
After: Each of the groups will
have a chance to perform in front of me and the camera and I will assess
their work: I will grade the students based on the Readers Theater
productions itself for each group as well as grade them on checking for
comprehension. This grading will be based on techniques and if the role they
played flowed properly as well as how well the character discussions/expressions
went back and forth if any delays were present. I will also note to see how well
each reader has done as an individual and check for the level of fluency improvement
if any.
Include modifications for students
with IEPs, ELLs, struggling readers, and/or gifted students.
IEPS, ELLS, struggling readers – The
Readers Theater script will be grade level appropriate for them to read very
basic sentence structure and it will allow for rereading for them to be able
to master the task and gain further positive production with fluency.
Gifted Students- They will be broken up into 1 per each group
as a buddy system to help with engaging in fluency and helping their peers. Also,
they will help the production with making any extra background props or other
things they may want to add into the production if time allows.
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Instructional resources and
materials used to engage students in learning.
Script:
Video Camera for production
purpose to make this authentic.
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Reflection:
●
Did your instruction support
learning for the whole class and the students who need great support or
challenge? YES
●
What changes would you make to
support better student learning of the central focus?
Have students break in groups and make
their own Readers Theater Script and then do a production from their own script.
●
Why do you think these changes
would improve student learning? Support your explanation from evidence of
research and/or theory.
This will just enhance their
learning skills as well as keep them engaged and learning how to be fluent
readers and respond to others in a working group manner professionally.
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Great Lesson. I observe your format. Especially Theory Based . I did not include such until in the Reflections. I have been writing these plans for so long. Some instructors said we should not invent and some said we are not to use old lessons. There should be a common rule.
ReplyDeleteNice lesson plan. I did a similar one for Readers Theater as well. I like how you are assessing by group so its easier to see how fluent they are reading instead of having them perform as a whole class which may be harder to assess each student individually.
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